Reading ComprehensionDifficulty: Hard

PT120 S2 P2 Q6 Explanation

Cultural Revolution Artistic Effects

A free, expert breakdown of this official LSAT Reading Comprehension question.

TopicsMain PointHumanities

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Passage

The Cultural Revolution of 1966 to 1976, initiated by Communist Party Chairman Mao Zedong in an attempt to reduce the influence of China’s intellectual elite on the country’s institutions, has had lasting repercussions on Chinese art. It intensified the absolutist mind-set of Maoist Revolutionary Realism, which had dictated the content and style reality artists could portray was one that had been thoroughly colored and distorted by political ideology.

Ironically, the same set of requirements that constricted artistic expression during the Cultural Revolution has had the opposite effect since; many artistic movements have flourished in reaction to the monotony of Revolutionary Realism. One of these, the Scar Art movement of the 1980s, was spearheaded by a group of intellectual painters who as outstanding or perfect, the Scar artists chose instead to portray the bleak realities of modernization.

As the 1980s progressed, the Scar artists’ radical approach to realism became increasingly co-opted for political purposes, and as this political cast became stronger and more obvious, many artists abandoned the movement. Yet a preoccupation with rural life persisted, giving rise to a related development known as the Native Soil movement, which romanticize certain qualities of rural Chinese society in order to appeal to Western galleries and collectors.

What this question is testing

Main Point

Your task

Capture the passage's overall primary point — the claim everything else supports.

Common trap

Answers that are true but too narrow (a single paragraph) or too broad (beyond the passage's scope).

Winning move

Summarize the whole passage in one sentence first, then match it to a choice.

Reading along? Open the full official question in LawHub — we show a fragment here and keep the reasoning in our own words.

The question
6.

Which one of the following titles most accurately captures the main point

Answer choices

  1. Trap11% picked this

    “Painting and Politics: A Survey of Political Influences on Contemporary

    Only One Influence Out of Scope: contemporary All three movements (Revolutionary Realism, Scar Art, and Native Soil) had the same political influence: the Cultural Revolution. So it doesn't make sense to use a title that suggests we'll be reading about a variety (a survey) of influences. And this was about Chinese art from 1966-1989. It's not clear whether we can call that contemporary.

  2. Trap7% picked this

    “How Two Movements in Chinese Painting Transformed the

    Reversed Causal Relationship Two vs. Three Movements This title is suggesting that we'll read an essay in which Scar Art and Native Soil transform the Cultural Revolution. But as our Most Valuable Sentence (the 1st) reminds us, Scar Art and Native Soil are repercussions of the Cultural Revolution. They are effects, not causes. Also, this answer leaves out one of the 3 movements (presumably Revolutionary Realism).

  3. Wrong Emphasis: Rural Life3% picked this

    “Scarred Reality: A Look into Chinese Rural Life in the Late

    This title makes it seem like we'll read an article about the day to day conditions of Chinese peasants working in the fields, instead of the passage we did read about art movements.

  4. Too Narrow: Realism10% picked this

    “The Rise of Realism in Post-Maoist Art

    The first two movements (Revolutionary Realism and Scar Art) both purported to be realist, although in very different ways. However, the third movement, Native Soil "idealized traditional peasant life .. romanticizing certain qualities of rural Chinese society". It was not about gritty realism. It was about appealing to Western collectors who wanted a portrait of non-miserable Chinese farmers. It's also not correct to call Revolutionary Realism a post-Mao art movement. It seems like that movement began before and continued through the Cultural Revolution instigated by Mao.

  5. Correct68% picked this

    “The Unforeseen Artistic Legacy of China’s

    Why this is right

    This vibes the most with our Most Valuable Sentence (the 1st of the passage). All three movements were connected together as "lasting repercussions" of the Cultural Revolution. So it makes sense to call them "the artistic legacy", the aftermath, the consequences. The unforeseen part of this answer is reacting to the "Ironically" at the beginning of the 2nd. The same set of Cultural Revolution requirements that led to the absolutist pro-state propaganda of Revolutionary Realism "has had the opposite effect since". The Cultural Revolution wanted art to show how contemporary Chinese society was outstanding / perfect. Scar Art was like, "We'll talk about how contemporary Chinese society sucks". And Native Soil was like, "We'll talk about how old school rural Chinese society was outstanding / perfect".

    Skill tested: Main Point · how this choice captures the passage's function is the move to repeat next time.

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